Friday, August 30, 2024

A music lover's must-see in Brussels: The MIM!


Anonymous, Fretted Clavichord, Low Countries or Northern Germany, early 17th century/By Patricia Leslie, June 16,2024 at the Musical Instruments Museum, Brussels
Amidst the clavichords at the Musical Instruments Museum, Brussels/By Patricia Leslie, June 16,2024 at the Musical Instruments Museum, Brussels
Girolamo de ZentiWing Shaped Spinet,  Rome, 1637/By Patricia Leslie, June 16,2024 at the Musical Instruments Museum, Brussels

There's a rich and historical musical instruments museum in Brussels, one of the most fascinating museums I found on my art history tour of Belgium and the Netherland this summer, and the more I think of it, the more it becomes my favorite museum and not even on our roster!

The museum is called the (surprise!Musical Instruments Museum often known by its acronym, MIM.

I went to the MIM with two music aficionados from the tour, one whose family, the Ruckers are associated with the development of the harpsichord, dating from the 16th and 17th centuries.
Albrecht Hass Hieronymus, Harpsichord, Hamburg, 1734/By Patricia Leslie, June 16,2024 at the Musical Instruments Museum, Brussels
Gabriel Townsend, Virginal, London, 1641/By Patricia Leslie, June 16,2024 at the Musical Instruments Museum, Brussels
Louis Sternberg, Upright Piano, Brussels, c.1865; legacy of Queen Marie-Henriette of Belgium/By Patricia Leslie, June 16,2024 at the Musical Instruments Museum, Brussels
Herman Lichtenthal, 'Dog Kennel' Piano, Brussels, c. 1834. There were so many unusual pieces at the Musical Instruments Museum, I took this photo because of this name; the maker received a Belgian patent for it, called, in French, "piano 'a' niche de chien." At the bottom of the lower case, the player could put her feet. The pedals were at either side of the opening/By Patricia Leslie, June 16,2024 at the Musical Instruments Museum, Brussels
Mangeot Freres & Cie, Double Grand Piano with Mirrored Keyboard, Paris, 1879/By Patricia Leslie, June 16,2024 at the Musical Instruments Museum, Brussels

Rick Steves calls the MIM "one of Europe's best music museums," and once you've been fortunate enough to visit it, I think you will agree.

Later, I corresponded with
 the Royal Museums of Art and History's Marc Janssens who emailed me that 1,200 instruments are on display.
 Pedal harps/By Patricia Leslie, June 16,2024 at the Musical Instruments Museum, Brussels


Cousineau pere et fils, Pedal HarpParis, 1780-1795. From the MIM website: "This harp is one of the first instruments acquired by Victor-Charles Mahillon (1841-1924), the first curator of the Musée instrumental du Conservatoire (now MIM), which opened in 1877.

Georges Cousineau (1732-1800) and his son Jacques-Georges Cousineau (1760-1836) were harp makers based in Paris. They worked for Queen Marie-Antoinette (1755-1793), among others. Jacques-Georges was himself a harpist and published a harp method in the early 19th century/By Patricia Leslie, June 16,2024 at the Musical Instruments Museum, Brussels

Erard, Pedal Harp, 1879, Paris/By Patricia Leslie, June 16,2024 at the Musical Instruments Museum, Brussels
Charles-Joseph Sax, Ophicleide, Brussels, after 1841 (left) and Adolphe Sax, Bass Clarinet, Brussels, c. 1840. The label says Adolphe Sax wanted to create a new instrument with sounds similar to strings but with greater strength and intensity. He borrowed from the ophicleide and the bass clarinet to make a saxophone which he presented at the industrial exhibition in Brussels in 1841/By Patricia Leslie, June 16,2024 at the Musical Instruments Museum, Brussels
 Adolphe Sax (1814-1894) and his invention/By Patricia Leslie, June 16,2024 at the Musical Instruments Museum, Brussels
Adolphe Sax, Soprano Saxophone in B Flat, Paris, 1864/By Patricia Leslie, June 16,2024 at the Musical Instruments Museum, Brussels
Adolphe-Edouard Sax, Sigurd Trumpet, Paris, 1907/By Patricia Leslie, June 16,2024 at the Musical Instruments Museum, Brussels
Ludwig Embach & Co., Keyed Serpent, Amsterdam, 1820-1844/By Patricia Leslie, June 16,2024 at the Musical Instruments Museum, Brussels

Sadly, my camera lost power when I happened upon this chandelier of serpents made from wood, brass, hide, and textiles, this picture from the Musical Instruments Museum. During the 17th century, the serpent chandelier was mainly used for singing in church and later, as a bass in bands until it was replaced by the ophicleide and tuba. Mouthpieces were placed at the top of the serpents, here removed to make room for candle holders.
  According to MIM, this chandelier belonged to the town band of Puurs – a municipality in the Province of Antwerp – prior to the MIM being able to acquire it around 1900. Originally, it comprised twelve serpents, but two were in a poor condition and are kept in the museum’s reserves.


Wikipedia could stand updating since the MIM has more than the 7,000 instruments Wikipedia claims but, according to Mr. Janssens, MIM has 10,000 (!), the oldest instrument (and on display) "without a doubt phalangeal whistles" just about 20,000 years old, dating from the late paleolithic age (18,000 - 12,000 BC).

But back to the number of instruments which Wikipedia says MIM's 7,000 pieces make it "one of the largest collections of musical instruments on the planet"! (Wait 'til Wikipedia learns it's only 3,000 short. Dear Wikipedia, does this make it the largest collection of musical instruments on the planet?)

The museum is around the corner, across the street from the Magritte Museum (more on that later) in a gorgeous Art Nouveau building with wooden floors which formerly was the Old England department store.

The MIM began in 1877 "when it was attached to the Brussels Royal Music Conservatory with the didactic purpose of showing early instruments to the students," according to its website.

During my wanderings on four floors, I discovered many new instruments (to me).

If you have an interest in music of any sort, you will not want to miss this enthralling collection where headphones play the sounds of the instruments you see. (They are simple to use.)

At 5 p.m. the MIM's closing hour forced my departure 
and I left on a ramble through Brussels in search for my far-flung hotel, but first, a stop at a cathedral on the way down the hill where service had just begun.

It was the Notre-Dame de la Chapelle (Our Lady of the Chapel Church) built between the 12th and 13th centuries above a chapel which was ordered in 1134 for monks, according to Wikipedia. Pieter Brueghel the Elder (c. 1525 - 1569) is buried at the church.

The Notre-Dame de la Chapelle, Brussels/Photo by Trougnouf (Benoit Brummer), Wikipedia

With cavernous insides and huge windows (30 feet?), the service language was not French nor English. Latin? Probably Dutch. Whatever it was I could not understand it, but the "church proper" promptly ushered me out of the outer aisleway where I stood at the rear admiring the windows. Although we had no common language with which to communicate, it only took me seconds to realize that "strangers" were not allowed in the outer aisleway, but in the center of the church seemed to be OK with him.

Since I planned to only spend a few moments at the church, I sat at the back and watched a man and a woman enter the church, find seats and immediately drop to their knees in the pew on the uneven tile (like concrete) floors. There was no kneel padding of any sort.

This was my vantage point from the rear of Notre-Dame de la Chapelle. Photo by Trougnouf (Benoit Brummer), Wikipedia

I can't wait to get back home and tell folks at my church how they kneel! I thought to myself.

But soon enough, I was doing the same, pushed by peer pressure to join the entire congregation which knelt on the cold floor.

In a few minutes, hanging on to the back of the chair in front of me, I was able to stand up and mosey along.

For when in Brussels, you do like the Brusseleers do! You kneel on concrete!

patricialesli@gmail.com



Saturday, August 17, 2024

'It Ends with Us,' schmaltzy but good


Justin Baldoni and Blake Lively in Sony Pictures' It Ends With Us



It's bombed with the critics yet soars with the public which means it's a hit!

Yessiree moviegoers, over at Rotten Tomatoes the critics give it a 57% favorability rating and the people, 92% which is why I went to see it since the public is always right. (I'm guessing it didn't have enough biting edge for the know-it-alls. My friend, Chris, couldn't stand it:  "Too syrupy," she said.)

Remember Bohemian Rhapsody? (60%; 85%) and although I'd label It Ends With Us a chick flick, when I went to see it, half the audience was male (maybe there to catch the sex scenes which are many and good! Thank you, Justin Baldoni, the director, for omitting the obligatory breasts [I'm not sure that was his decision] which all look alike anyway and do nothing for the presupposed mostly females watching).

When I discovered Baldoni was also one of the leads, I wondered how successful he'd be at either job, and he excels.

In this film, he's a playboy neurosurgeon pursuing an unhitched damsel (Blake Lively) who also is chased by an old flame (Brandon Sklenar), and gurrls...how divine to be chased by two men the likes of them! A fairy tale come true! (This ignores the chief message of the movie - how to escape domestic violence - but still, these menfolk are all right to look at.)

He's too good to be true, right? (Which one? Gurls: Whenever you feel like this, trust your instincts and run fast because your instincts are always right.)

I read that the Academy Awards will bestow its first Oscar for casting next April, and surely, the End's Kristy Carlson will be nominated for her finding the incredible Isabela Ferrer and Alex Neustaedter who play the high schoolers, pheneomenal in their likenesses to Lively and Baldoni, and they deliver admirable performances, to boot!

But the absolute best acting is by Jenny Slate who plays the best friend and sister. (She reminded me of Gilda Radner. Maybe Slate will be nominated for Best Supporting Actress in End.) Her husband here is Hasan Minhaj, an unbelievable (another "too good to be true") partner with his mouth constantly open wide.

The music by Duncan Blickenstaff and Rob Simonsen is good; nothing to write home about, but costumer Eric Daman forgot to change the styles from teen years to today.

Hats off to Lively's hair stylists Anne Carroll and Robert Lugo.

The film is a bit slow taking off, but hold on, it's coming as the plot thickens and becomes more intense. Other "hot button" issues (sexism, abortion, parental relationships) are included in subtle ways for the most part, but don't let them deter you from going if you favor skipping depressing, in-your-face, realistic movies like I do.  We get enough of real life in real life.
Please, let me escape for a while!

There's a lot of online controversy about a filming conflict between Lively and Baldoni which builds traffic, doncha know

The movie is based on the novel by the same name by Colleen Hoover who serves as one of seven (! I lost count) executive producers, her books, not my genre to read (sniff), but in the theatre restroom, I heard a woman say the movie was better than the book.

Now, when was the last time you heard that?

And that's all she wrote and all you need to know to enjoy a couple of hours of escape, worth your money and time.

Patricialesli@gmail.com

Thursday, August 8, 2024

Modern women, modern art close Sunday at the Women's Museum


April Banks (b. 1972, Takoma Park, Maryland), Future Ancient, 2022, fused glass, cut metal, and LED light panel. The label says the work "proposes an alternate path to self-knowledge, equally focused on past lineage and future legacy."/Photo by Patricia Leslie


The large exhibition, New Worlds: Women to Watch 2024, featuring works by 28 women from around the globe (some of whom have more than one work on display) is set to close Sunday at the National Museum of Women in the Arts, and if you want a glimpse of what the younger bunch (or those generally under age 50) is thinking artwise, rush to see it, but be advised, you'll want to hold on to your mind which may be blown away by the creativity and the artists' visions of the future, the past and present.

It's beyond the wildest of imaginations and all have a theme and deeply personal message about what they've done, the purpose and why they have used the materials they chose. 

But, hope for the future? 

I couldn't find any, maybe due to my (aging) shades and perspective. What I saw was a dark and gloomy vision of the future, but that was before Kamala was nominated. (She who brings joy.) Since then, perhaps there is room for some optimism? None I found here.

Kathryn Wat, deputy director for art, programs and public engagement and chief curator at the National Museum of Women in the Arts, welcomes visitors to the exhibition, New Worlds:  Women to Watch 2024. On the left is Intra-Venus, 2019-21 in carrara marble by Marina Vargas (b. 1980, Granada, Spain)/Photo by Patricia Leslie
Mona Cliff/HanukGahNé (Spotted Cloud, b. 1977, Prescott, AZ), Conjured Topography, 2022/Photo by Patricia Leslie

Prescoia seed beads, maple wood, beeswax, copal resin, pine resin, benzoin resin, and thread on plywood. The label says the "beads pay homage to nature" which required Cliff to spend "hundreds of hours adding thousands of beads to the wood surface," to honor "the labor-intensive work of women artisans."

Detail of Conjured Topography, 2022/Photo by Patricia Leslie


SHAN (sic) Wallace (b. 1991, Baltimore), Pale Blue Egun, 2024.  Flashe, gesso, paper, gouache, oil stick, shells, and crackle paste on wood
/Photo by Patricia Leslie

The label says the artist "pays homage to the spectrum of Black experience in the United States" fusing "folklore and fantasy to explore belief systems and rituals related to death for the Black community. Motifs such as dice, shells, and a chicken serve as offerings for or methods of communication with the dead."


NMWA’s Women to Watch series is presented every three years and features emerging and underrepresented women artists who work in regions of the world where the museum has outreach committees.

On its website, NMWA notes that in the last decade just 11 percent of all acquisitions by "prominent American museums" were by women. With its promotion and exhibitions, NMWA hopes to draw greater attention to this dearth of female artists presence.

Amanda Phingbodhipakkiya (b. 1988, Atlanta), the primitive sign of wanting, 2024,
vintage TV screens, raspberry pis, and internet-connected receipt printers which invites viewer to interact with the work by scanning a QR code found on one of the screens
/Photo by Patricia Leslie

The label quotes the artist who says her work is a “'call to moral vigilance,'” inviting "viewers to consider the ethical implications of human advancement in the face of climate change and rapidly changing technology. Assembled from discarded artifacts and found objects, this interactive installation challenges visitors to confront their moral biases about issues facing us today—and to imagine the possibilities of tomorrow." 
Detail of the primitive sign of wanting, 2024/Photo by Patricia Leslie
Detail of the primitive sign of wanting, 2024/Photo by Patricia Leslie
Sophia Pompéry (b. 1984, Berlin), Fluten (Floods), 2023
Steel, perforated latex, and LED lights/Photo by Patricia Leslie

The label says "Pompéry’s practice lies at the intersection of art, science, and philosophy, investigating the artifice of constructs such as money, units of measure, and time. Fluten comprises an aerial map of recorded levels of light pollution in the Arctic Circle.  The haphazard placement of the rods implies the futility of creating records of the natural world—its time scale is beyond human comprehension."


Irene Fenara (b. 1990, Bologna, Italy), Three Thousand TIgers, 2020
Wool and silk tapestry
/Photo by Patricia Leslie

The label says: "Fenara explores how technology can change our perception of reality. The artist feeds a data set of three thousand images of tigers—approximately the current number of living tigers in the wild—into a generative algorithm" resulting in "a distorted digital fauna."

She then "turned the patterns into tapestries, referring to the practice of making animal-hide rugs, and had them produced in India, where most living tigers are found."  I can't see any tigers here, but my imagination is more limited than the computer's.
Detail of Three Thousand TIgers, 2020/Photo by Patricia Leslie
 Detail of Three Thousand TIgers, 2020/Photo by Patricia Leslie

Molly Vaughan (b. 1977, London) Project 42: Gwen Amber Rose Araju, Newark, CA, 2021/Photo by Patricia Leslie

Inkjet- and silkscreen-printed fabrics with headdress. The label says this "responds to violence toward transgender people in the United States. The artist and her team create garments that commemorate the lives of murdered transgender and gender-nonconforming individuals. Using Google Earth, Vaughan takes screen shots of locations where these murders have occurred. She manipulates the digital images to create abstract patterns, printing them on fabric to make into clothing that can be worn by a collaborator during an activation."
Nicki Green (b. 1986, Boston), 
Anointed (double bidet basin with faucets), 2019/Photo by Patricia Leslie

Glazed vitreous china with epoxy. The label says Green "interrogates gendered binaries of Judaic ritual baths that complicate participation for trans individuals. Drawing from her Jewish background and gender politics, she transforms urinals and bidets into sacred wash basins that can affirm the holiness of trans bodies." This is one of two works on this theme by Green in the exhibition.


Ana María Hernando (b. 1959, Buenos Aires), detail of 
Nadar en el diluvio de aguas caldas (To Swim in the Deluge of Warm Waters), 2024/Photo by Patricia Leslie

Tulle, wood, metal lattice, and felt.
The label says the artist includes "association with feminine clothing and sewing" to create "monuments that celebrate the collective work of generations of unacknowledged women. Her works manifest the feminine as joyful and inexorable."


Works pictured above are those which were of the most interest to me, but all of them produced interest and awe.  You'll see!

Two local artists (April Banks, Takoma Park, MD, and SHAN (sic) Wallace, Baltimore) are represented.

A soft cover exhibition catalog of 100 pages is available in the shop or online for $23.95.

What: New Worlds:  Women to Watch, 2024


When: Closing Sunday, August 11, 2024. The museum is open Tuesday through Sundays, 10 a.m. - 5 p.m. 

Where: The National Museum of Women in the Arts, 1250 New York Avenue, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20005

Admission: $16, adults; $13, D.C. residents and those over age 70; free admission for members, those under age 21, and disabled persons and attendant. Free for all on the first Sunday and second Wednesday of every month.

For more information: 202-783-5000 or visit nmwa.org.

Metro stations: Metro Center (exit at 13th Street and walk two blocks north) or (better) walk a short distance from McPherson Square.


patricialesli@gmail.com

Friday, July 26, 2024

Textiles and modern abstraction close Sunday at the National Gallery of Art


Ann Hamilton (b. 1956), (side by side.coats), 2018/2023.  The label says Ms. Hamilton worked on her art in northern Portugal, sourcing fleeces from a local farmer and using coats from secondhand shops to show "enduring interdependencies: between human and animal, manufactured and organic, nurture and sacrifice." Loaned by the artist/By Patricia Leslie

The National Gallery of Art hosts a large show, Woven Histories: Textiles and Modern Abstractionin eight rooms to display some 160 works by 50 artists from around the globe. Their art begins with the first World War and continues to present day.

The exhibition brings to mind the question: Why have textiles and related arts taken a back seat to oil, sculpture, prints and drawings and other fine arts?*

The fact that textiles and woven arts are usually associated with women likely plays a role. 

Sophie Taeuber-Arp, 1889-1943, Cushion Panel (detail), 1916 (facsimile 2021) cross-stitch embroidery. Loaned by the Museum of Design, Zurich. Silhouettes of viewers are reflected in the protective glass/By Patricia Leslie
Jeffrey Gibson (b. 1972), from left, The Past as Future Artifact (Mask 2), 2020, The Anthropophagic Effect, Helmet No. 2, 2019, and The Anthropophagic Effect, Helmet No. 1, 2019.  Materials used included birch bark, pine resin, porcupine quills, brass bells, metal jingles, turquoise, and beeswax. Loaned by the artist/By Patricia Leslie

These artists produce their works for the same reasons as other artists: to effect political and social change, to capitalize on change, to build momentum for matters of the time, to promote more awareness of cultural and historical change, to enjoy beauty, to document scenes from current events, to express themselves.
Sonia Delaunay (1885-1979), Electric Prisms (detail), 1913, Davis Museum at Wellesley College/By Patricia Leslie
Sonia Delaunay (1885-1979), Groupe de femmes, 1923-1924, watercolor, colored inks and graphite on paper glued on cardboard, Centre Pompidou, Paris/By Patricia Leslie
In a textiles gallery at the National Galley of Art, Washington, D.C./By Patricia Leslie


Eden Gallery with offices around the world may have answers to why these arts have not enjoyed the same prestige and importance as other "fine arts."

On its website, Eden asks:

What exactly is fine art, and how has its definition changed over the centuries?

Art, in its broadest sense, embodies the act of crafting something unique that tantalizes our visual or auditory senses. Fine art, often labeled as "high art," stands as the pinnacle of artistic expression, emphasizing aesthetics over functionality. This inherent aesthetic quality sets fine art apart from "low arts" which are crafted with a more utilitarian purpose in mind.

Yet, as the art world continues to evolve, the once-clear boundaries that defined what is "high" or "low" art blur. This prompts the question: should any art form be considered superior to another in today's democratized art landscape?

Sonia Delaunay, 1885-1979, from left, Summer Dress, c. 1926, printed silk and Dress, c. 1926, printed and pleated silk. Private collection/By Patricia Leslie

The artists explain their various techniques of weaving, knitting, netting, knotting, and felting** and the reasons why they choose the mediums they do.  

Here I've included artworks which I found of particular interest, and without paying attention to the artists' names as I photograhed them, I was struck later as I write this, that of the few I chose for this blog post, three are by Sonia Delaunay 1885-1979.

Olga de Amaral (b. 1932), Cintas Entrelazadas, c. 1969, wool and cotton. Loaned by the artist/By Patricia Leslie
Marilou Schultz (b. 1954), Replica of a Chip (detail), 1994, wool. The label says the Intel Corporation commissioned Ms. Schultz, a Native American weaver, "to make a blanket featuring their Pentium microprocessor," using the traditional techniques that she learned as a child growing up on the reservation. The company proposed "affinities between Native American aesthetics and advanced technologies" as part of its marketing campaign. Loaned by the American Indian Science and Engineering Society/By  Patricia Leslie
Ellen Lesperance (b. 1971), Cardigan Worn by One Woman of the Boeing Five,  Tried for Entering the Boeing Nuclear Missile Plant on September 27th, 1983, Sentenced to Fifteen Days in the King County Jail for Defending Life on Earth, 2011. Loaned by Brooklyn Museum/By Patricia Leslie
Liz Collins (b. 1968) and Gary Graham (b.1969) (GRIZ), Pride Dress from the Seven Deadly Sins series, 2003. Loaned by Museum of Art, Rhode Island School of Design/By Patricia Leslie
Liz Collins (b. 1968) and Gary Graham (b.1969) (GRIZ), Pride Dress from the Seven Deadly Sins series, 2003. Loaned by Museum of Art, Rhode Island School of Design/By Patricia Leslie

A hardback catalog, Woven Histories: Textiles and Modern Abraction of almost 300 pages with 200 colored illustrations is available in the shops, online at shop.nga.gov, and by phone, 800-697-9350 for $32.50. Accompanying products are available.

The exhibition comes to NGA after its showing at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art and, after its stay in Washington, will travel to the National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa (November 8, 2024–March 2, 2025) and then, the Museum of Modern Art, New York (April 20–September 13, 2025).

Lynne Cooke, senior curator in the department of special projects in modern art, National Gallery of Art, curated the exhibition.

*After you've seen the show, maybe you can answer the question.


**sculpting and making figures and shapes from wool 

Hannah Höch is one of the artists included in this show and for more on her, go here where she's included in a book on Da Da.

What: 
Woven Histories: Textiles and Modern Abstraction

When: Through July 28, 2024. The National Gallery hours are 10 a.m. - 5 p.m. daily.

Where: East Building Concourse and Ground Floor, National Gallery of Art, 6th and Constitution, Washington

How much: Admission is always free at the National Gallery of Art.

Metro stations for the National Gallery of Art:
Smithsonian, Federal Triangle, Navy Memorial-Archives, or L'Enfant Plaza

For more information: (202) 737-4215

Accessibility information: (202) 842-6905


patricialesli@gmail.com

Wednesday, July 24, 2024

Unsung Van Goghs in the Netherlands


Vincent van Gogh, Self-Portrait with Pipe and Straw Hat, 1887, Van Gogh Museum
Vincent van Gogh, Self-Portrait, 1887, Van Gogh Museum

Vincent van Gogh, Self-Portrait, 1887, Van Gogh Museum, to show security lock on back/By Patricia Leslie
At the Van Gogh Museum, June 24, 2024/By Patricia Leslie
Vincent van Gogh, Cottage, 1885, Van Gogh Museum.  The label says Van Gogh  loved these homes, comfortable places which made their occupants feel safe and secure.  Two families lived here, made evident by the two front doors.  Vincent "deliberately set the scene at dusk, the time when the peasants have returned home after a hard day's work."
Vincent van Gogh, Head of a Woman, 1885, Van Gogh Museum. The label says the artist set out to paint a series of 50 "'heads' ....to represent the peasants...who had been tilling the land for centuries. 'They remind one of the earth, sometimes appear to have been modelled [sic] out of it,'" he wrote.
Vincent van Gogh, Montmartre: Behind the Moulin de la Galette, 1887, Van Gogh Museum
Vincent van Gogh, Montmartre:  WIndmills and Allotments, 1887, Van Gogh Museum.  The label says he "derived the fresh, pure colours...from contemporary French art."
At the Van Gogh Museum, June 24, 2024, looking at ...one of his!/By Patricia Leslie
Vincent van Gogh, Three Novels, 1887, Van Gogh Museum. The label says Vincent "attached so much importance to contemporary literature that he painted no fewer than four still lifes of modern French novels....The oval format...is due to its unusual support, namely the lid of a little Japanese box."
Vincent van Gogh, Garden with Courting Couples:  Square Saint- Pierre, 1887, Van Gogh Museum. The label says he called this park "'the painting of the garden with lovers.'...Van Gogh took liberties with the Pointillist technique....[and] succeeded in rendering the effects of a dazzling spring day....He too longed for a wife and a family, but he had 'the most impossible love stories.'  He ultimately resigned himself to this situation; after all, he was devoted to his art."
Paul Gauguin, Clovis Sleeping, 1884, Van Gogh Museum. New to the collection.  

The label says that this is the first Gauguin impressionist painting in the museum. Vincent and his brother, Theo, collected Gauguins and given the "close, but complex friendship, which was all about artistic exchange," between the two artists,  Gauguin's work "has always been a focal point" of the collection.

This has a sad ending...Clovis was Gauguin's "apple of his father's eye" who was five when his father painted him sleeping.  In 1885 while the rest of the family stayed in Copenhagen, the father and son moved to Paris where they lived in poverty.  Gauguin wrote that "Clovis was 'very sweet and played all alone in his little corner without tormenting me.'"

To concentrate only on his art, Gauguin left Paris for Brittany in 1886, leaving Clovis behind in a boarding house with strangers when Clovis was only 7. Gauguin did not visit his son because, for one reason, he did not have money to pay the boarding house for Clovis's expenses. 

At age 21, in 1900 Clovis died of blood poisoning.  He had not seen his father in nine years, his father having left the continent for Tahiti in 1895.  Sounds rather like I'd imagine Gauguin to be:  self-centered and another "me! me! me! me!" personality. Read more about Clovis here.
Paul Gauguin, Clovis Sleeping, 1884, Van Gogh Museum.
Vincent van Gogh, View from Theo's Apartment, 1887, Van Gogh Museum. In Paris
Vincent van Gogh, In the Cafe: Agostina Segatori in Le Tambourin, 1887, Van Gogh Museum. Okay, some works are better known than others, like this one.  Agostina owned this café which Van Gogh frequented. A woman in a café was a popular subject for artists, the label says.
Vincent van Gogh, The Harvest, 1888, Van Gogh Museum. To Van Gogh, this work left him "very satisfied" and "absolutely surpassed all his other works from this period," according to the label. Around Arles. 
Vincent van Gogh, The Zouave, 1888, Van Gogh Museum. A Zouave was a French soldier stationed in North Africa.
Vincent van Gogh, Gauguin's Chair, 1888, Van Gogh Museum. The label says this "unusual painting...can be understood as a portrait of the artist."  Not long afterwards, the two artists "would quarrel fiercely and part ways."  Van Gogh painted his own chair in blue and yellow.
Vincent van Gogh, The Hill of Montmartre with Stone Quarry, 1886, Van Gogh Museum.
Theo van Gogh's Cabinet, 1790-1800, Van Gogh Museum. This cabinet housed Vincent's brother's collection of prints and drawings, and later, Vincent's letters.  After her husband, Theo, died, Johanna "took it upon herself to order and organise (sic) all these letters so that they could be published," all of the correspondence now at the Van Gogh Museum/By Patricia Leslie


At the Potato Eaters, Van Gogh Museum/By Patricia Leslie

Vincent van Gogh, Wheatfield under Thunderclouds, 1890, Van Gogh Museum, painted around Auvers during the last weeks of his life when, the label says, he tried to "express 'sadness, and extreme loneliness.'  The landscapes' effects on him were "'healthy' and 'invigorating.'"
Vincent van Gogh, Landscape at Twilight, 1890, Van Gogh Museum
Vincent van Gogh, Tree Roots (detail), 1890, Van Gogh Museum. The morning of his death, Van Gogh worked on this, his last painting, the label says, which was left unfinished due to his suicide by firearm.  Although there is question regarding annoyances by neighborhood children and whether the artist did kill himself, the Van Gogh Museum states unequivocally that he died by suicide.


Moving on two days later to the Kröller-Müller Museum, did I say all the Van Goghs in the Netherlands were lesser-knowns?  Not the case! 

Above, the hand and arm of a guide points out A Cafe at Night, 1888 at the Kröller-Müller. The label says Van Gogh "set himself the difficult task of making a nocturnal painting without using black...one of the highlights of his oeuvre." Astronomical research confirms the accuracy of Van Gogh's sky, painted "precisely" what he saw on the night of September 16 or 17, 1888/By Patricia Leslie

Vincent van Gogh, Girl in a Wood, 1882, Kröller-Müller Museum. The label says a gift from Theo permitted Vincent to purchase paints which did not require mixing, and he also bought a "perspective frame" which could be used to set up on uneven surfaces like here.  "It is very likely that he paints it [above] on his knees...[made evident by] the low perspective, but also because pieces of leaves...have become lodged in the paint." 
Vincent van Gogh, Cyresses with Two Figures, 1890, Kröller-Müller Museum. The label describes two women, which he added later, standing in a lovely landscape, but "the work is not about [them, according to the label], but about the row of trees behind them." Van Gogh wrote Theo: "'The cypresses still preoccupy me.'"  He gave this painting to the Parisian art critic, Albert Aurier, "the first to write enthusiastically" about Van Gogh's work.
 
Vincent van Gogh, Interior of a Restaurant, 1887, Kröller-Müller Museum. The insides of 
cafés, bars, restaurants made good subject for impressionistic artists, including Van Gogh who did not identify this establishment.  The label notes the high-hanging hat on the wall. Van Gogh didn't care too much for city life or its inhabitants (whom he called "decadent") and six months after finishing this, he left Paris for the quieter surroundings of southern France.
Vincent van Gogh, Patch of Grass (detail), 1887, Kröller-Müller Museum. The label notes the minute refinement of each part of the painting: "In the hands of Van Gogh, a piece of nature that is usually part of a larger whole thus becomes a subject in itself." The colors here do not adequately convey the richness of the green in the painting.
Vincent van Gogh, Self-Portrait, 1887, Kröller-Müller Museum. The label says Vincent wrote to Theo: "'People say [...] that it's difficult to know oneself...but it's not easy to paint oneself either.''  Between 1886 and 1888, he painted about 25 mostly small self-portraits.  Since he didn't have much money to pay models, Vincent painted himself.  

Helene Kröller-Müller, the museum's founder, paid about 6,500 francs for this at an auction in Amsterdam which biographer Frederik Muller noted in 1919 was the only Van Gogh self-portrait in the collection. (She was one of the world's first Van Gogh collectors, who bought 15 Van Goghs when she visited Paris in 1912. The value today of 6,500 francs is about $7,340.)
Vincent van Gogh, Still Live with Straw Hat, 1881, Kröller-Müller Museum, one of the artist's first paintings.
Vincent van Gogh, Still Life with Jars, 1885, Kröller-Müller Museum.
Vincent van Gogh, Peasants Planting Potatoes, 1884, Kröller-Müller Museum. This was one of six renderings Van Gogh painted on commission for the dining room of amateur artist and goldsmith, Antoon Hermans. Initially, Van Gogh planned for two figures to be included in the work, but he added more people to please the buyer.  The label says:  "Van Gogh does not really manage to combine the figures into a whole."
A Van Gogh gallery, June 26, 2024 at the Kröller-Müller Museum with more room to enjoy art than found at the Amsterdam museum!/By Patricia Leslie
Vincent van Gogh, Path in the Park, 1888, Kröller-Müller Museum

Vincent van Gogh, The Green Vineyard, 1888, Kröller-Müller Museum
Vincent van Gogh, The Green Vineyard, (detail), 1888, Kröller-Müller Museum




Vincent van Gogh, Tree Trunks with Ivy, 1889, Kröller-Müller Museum

Vincent van Gogh, Tree Trunks with Ivy, (detail) 1889, Kröller-Müller Museum
Vincent van Gogh,View of Saintes-Marles-de-la- Mer, 1888, Kröller-Müller Museum.  In a stay of just a few days, Van Gogh completed nine drawings and a painting of the village on the Mediterranean, commenting how the sky and the sea changed colors.
Vincent van Gogh, Girl Peasant Women Digging Up Potatoes, 1885, Kröller-Müller Museum



The front of the Van Gogh Museum, Amsterdam, June 24, 2024/By Patricia Leslie


The rear and exit at the Van Gogh Museum, Amsterdam, June 24, 2024/By Patricia Leslie


Lunch at the Van Gogh Museum, Amsterdam, June 24, 2024. Not the greatest but okay, I guess, for museum food. (Eat before or after you go.) The utensils were compostable. Yay! The prices were high/By Patricia Leslie


In the Netherlands they pronounce his name "Van Hoff," his popularity, never ceasing. 

The National Gallery in London has just announced its major fall exhibition, the  "once-in-a-century" Van Gogh show, Poets and Lovers, certain to attract thousands.

At the Van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam, even with timed entry, the crowds surge, overflowing from the city's enormous tourist numbers. (Buy tickets online before you visit! One cringes to think what the crowds would be like without timed entry, and photos here show the crowd on a Monday. Pre-covid annual numbers of visitors to the museum were about 2.2 million of whom 85% were international guests.)

Neither the museum nor the  Kröller-Müller Museum* about an hour southeast of Amsterdam in Otterlo, have many of the famous Van Goghs of which enthusiasts are familiar, and someone in my group complained that the famous Van Goghs were few and far between in the Netherlands. 

Who cares when there was so much new to see?

Many of his self-portraits hang on the walls in both places. Artists who could not afford to pay models often settled for themselves in the mirror.

Depending upon your source, estimates about the number of Van Gogh self-portraits vary between 32 and 36.

The Kröller-Müller Museum says it has "the world's finest Vincent van Gogh collection" with the world's second largest Van Gogh collection of 90 paintings and more than 180 drawings (not all hang simultaneously) while the Van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam  houses the world's largest Van Gogh collection, with more than 200 paintings (including Sunflowers, Almond Blossom, and The Potato Eaters), 500 drawings and almost all of his letters.   

 The Van Gogh Studio says its namesake turned out 900 paintings and many more drawings and sketches in his short art life of ten years (1880-1890. The Van Gogh Museum estimates 1,300 works on paper). At both museums, standing close to the works (most covered in unobtrusive glass), his massive brush strokes are striking.  (Unlike Washington's National Gallery of Art which has automated devices to warn visitors they stand too close, sound devices in the Netherlands are human.)  

Pictured above are Van Gogh works in the two museums which I found of special interest. 

* A woman from New York City on my trip told me the Kröller-Müller Museum was the chief reason she had joined the Road Scholar group because it was the only museum which she had not visited, wanting to spend hours. On that day she skipped lunch (of vast importance to the rest of us!) to swoon in the Kröller-Müller galleries.


The entire collection at the Van Gogh Museum may be accessed here: www.vangoghmuseum.nl/en/search/collection.  Enjoy! 

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